1-4
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
"Trump Signs Executive Order on Free Speech on College Campuses”
By Susan Svrluga / Washington Post / March 21, 2019
1 President Trump signed an executive order Thursday protecting freedom of speech on
college campuses, surrounded by student activists who have said conservative views are
suppressed at universities.
2 Trump said he was taking "historic action to defend American students and American
values that have been under siege.”
3 The order does not, on its face, make dramatic changes. But it was welcomed by people
who say universities are fostering an unbalanced, liberal indoctrination of students — and
condemned by those who say freedom of inquiry is a fundamental tenet of higher education, one
the government should not be defining.
4 More than 100 students joined the president in the East Room for the signing, according
to a statement from the White House, along with state legislators, Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. The order directs 12 agencies that
make federal grants, in coordination with the Office of Management and Budget, to ensure
colleges are complying with the law and their own policies to promote free inquiry and debate.
5
It does not tie student-aid money to the order.
6 “Schools are already supposed to be following these rules," a senior administration
official said Thursday. “And essentially, each agency already conditions grants, and schools are
certifying that they're following these conditions. And they will just add free speech as one of
those conditions."
7
Trump told the students that people can have different views, “but they have to let you
speak.”
1
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term_.2357d6bcfd75
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ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
The president declared it the first in a number of steps the administration would take to
defend students' rights. Universities have tried to restrict free thought and impose conformity, he
said.
9
“All of that changes right now," he said. “We're dealing with billions and billions and
billions of dollars."
10
Universities that want taxpayer dollars should promote free speech, not silence it, he said.
11
Trump's announcement earlier this month that he would make federal funding for
universities contingent on assurances of free speech elicited cheers and applause at the
Conservative Political Action Conference meeting. But it also prompted questions, including
who would define and judge free speech and what type of federal funding could be withheld —
research dollars, student aid or both.
12 Those following the issue said they were relieved the order does not designate or create
an agency to police speech on campus, while acknowledging that the order's full effect could not
be known until it was implemented.
13 “To the extent that the executive order asks colleges to do what they are either legally
required to do — follow the First Amendment on public campuses, or follow their own promises
on private campuses — we think that should be uncontroversial," said Robert Shibley, executive
director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which advocates for freedom of
F.I.RE
speech on campus.
14 “It will come down to how each agency decides to implement it, what the steps are they
take to do that," Shibley said.
15 His organization and others, he said, will watch to see whether those agencies use clearly
established First Amendment principles upheld by law or instead rely on their own
interpretations.
16 Suzanne Nossel, the chief executive officer of PEN America, a human rights organization
that advocates for free expression, said the political context of the order was disturbing.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education 2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect=on&utm term.2357d6bcfd75
2
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
election of President Trump, it's gotten more dangerous on campus," she said. “Those who
advocate for legal abortion feel their backs are against the wall. It's more tense."
26 She said students have told her about other students and professors obstructing their
efforts to share their antiabortion views erasing sidewalk chalk messages, for example,
throwing blankets over information tables and pulling crosses out of the ground. “They have had
to fight for their First Amendment rights," Hawkins said. “This is an exciting day for us."
27 Trump strongly defended free speech on campus two years ago after police at the
University of California at Berkeley canceled a talk by the far-right provocateur Milo
Yiannopoulos amid intense protests by masked activists, who set fires and threw stones. Trump
tweeted the next morning, “If U.C. Berkeley does not allow free speech and practices violence
on innocent people with a different point of view — NO FEDERAL FUNDS?"
28 Many higher-education leaders say freedom of speech is central to their academic
mission.
)
29 “College and university campuses are leading the way for our society in supporting free
speech," Julie Wollman, president of Widener University in Pennsylvania, said in a statement.
"On most campuses that work happens daily and naturally, without fanfare, because our
overarching and common mission in American higher education is to broadly educate and
prepare students for active participation as engaged citizens in our democracy."
30 The tensions that make headlines reflect the commitment to honor and encourage free
speech, Wollman said.
4
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term.2357d6bcfd75
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
Read the full text of the executive order here:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
IMPROVING FREE INQUIRY, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY AT
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States
of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Purpose. The purpose of this order is to enhance the quality of postsecondary
education by making it more affordable, more transparent, and more accountable. Institutions of
higher education (institutions) should be accountable both for student outcomes and for student
life on campus.
In particular, my Administration seeks to promote free and open debate on college and university
campuses. Free inquiry is an essential feature of our Nation's democracy, and it promotes
learning, scientific discovery, and economic prosperity. We must encourage institutions to
appropriately account for this bedrock principle in their administration of student life and to
avoid creating environments that stifle competing perspectives, thereby potentially impeding
beneficial research and undermining learning.
The financial burden of higher education on students and their families is also a national problem
that needs immediate attention. Over the past 30 years, college tuition and fees have grown at
more than twice the rate of the Consumer Price Index. Rising student loan debt, coupled with
low repayment rates, threatens the financial health of both individuals and families as well as of
Federal student loan programs. In addition, too many programs of study fail to prepare students
for success in today's job market.
The Federal Government can take meaningful steps to address these problems. Selecting an
institution and course of study are important decisions for prospective students and significantly
affect long-term earnings. Institutions should be transparent about the average earnings and loan
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term.2357d6bcfd75
5
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
repayment rates of former students who received Federal student aid. Additionally, the Federal
Government should make this information readily accessible to the public and to prospective
students and their families, in particular.
This order will promote greater access to critical information regarding the prices and outcomes
of postsecondary education, thereby furthering the goals of the National Council for the
American Worker established by Executive Order 13845 of July 19, 2018 (Establishing the
President's National Council for the American Worker). Increased information disclosure will
help ensure that individuals make educational choices suited to their needs, interests, and
circumstances. Access to this information will also increase institutional accountability and
encourage institutions to take into account likely future earnings when establishing the cost of
their educational programs.
Sec. 2. Policy. It is the policy of the Federal Government to:
(a) encourage institutions to foster environments that promote open, intellectually engaging, and
diverse debate, including through compliance with the First Amendment for public institutions
and compliance with stated institutional policies regarding freedom of speech for private
institutions;
(b) help students (including workers seeking additional training) and their families understand,
through better data and career counseling, that not all institutions, degrees, or fields of study
provide similar returns on their investment, and consider that their educational decisions should
account for the opportunity cost of enrolling in a program;
(c) align the incentives of institutions with those of students and taxpayers to ensure that
institutions share the financial risk associated with Federal student loan programs;
(d) help borrowers avoid defaulting on their Federal student loans by educating them about risks,
repayment obligations, and repayment options; and
(e) supplement efforts by States and institutions by disseminating information to assist students
in completing their degrees faster and at lower cost.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
Speech/?noredirect on&utm_term .2357d6bcfd75
6
1-4
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
"Trump Signs Executive Order on Free Speech on College Campuses”
By Susan Svrluga / Washington Post / March 21, 2019
1 President Trump signed an executive order Thursday protecting freedom of speech on
college campuses, surrounded by student activists who have said conservative views are
suppressed at universities.
2 Trump said he was taking "historic action to defend American students and American
values that have been under siege.”
3 The order does not, on its face, make dramatic changes. But it was welcomed by people
who say universities are fostering an unbalanced, liberal indoctrination of students — and
condemned by those who say freedom of inquiry is a fundamental tenet of higher education, one
the government should not be defining.
4 More than 100 students joined the president in the East Room for the signing, according
to a statement from the White House, along with state legislators, Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos. The order directs 12 agencies that
make federal grants, in coordination with the Office of Management and Budget, to ensure
colleges are complying with the law and their own policies to promote free inquiry and debate.
5
It does not tie student-aid money to the order.
6 “Schools are already supposed to be following these rules," a senior administration
official said Thursday. “And essentially, each agency already conditions grants, and schools are
certifying that they're following these conditions. And they will just add free speech as one of
those conditions."
7
Trump told the students that people can have different views, “but they have to let you
speak.”
1
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term_.2357d6bcfd75
1-4
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
17 It must be enforced in an ideologically neutral way that upholds the government's
responsibility not to discriminate based on viewpoint, she said, otherwise there is the risk “that
an order that purports to uphold the First Amendment ends up violating it."
18
Peter McPherson, president of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities,
called the order “alarming” because it could leave federally funded research vulnerable to
political influence.
19
Ted Mitchell, president of the American Council on Education, which represents college
and university presidents, said in a statement Thursday that it remains to be seen how those
requirements will be expanded.
20 “No matter how this order is implemented, it is neither needed nor desirable, and could
lead to unwanted federal micromanagement of the cutting-edge research that is critical to our
nation's continued vitality and global leadership," he said.
21 Spencer Brown, spokesman for the Young America's Foundation, which advocates for
free speech on high school and college campuses, welcomed the order.
22 He said it will build upon decades of efforts by the group, including a 1983 case that went
to the Supreme Court after police arrested two members of the foundation outside the Soviet
Embassy in Washington who were protesting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
23 More than a dozen student activists from the foundation were invited to the White House
for the signing ceremony, Brown said. While suppression of certain viewpoints on campus is a
long-running issue, he said, it has become worse in recent years.
24 "I do think we've seen a ratcheting-up of the intensity," he said, in the way conservative
students are treated as second-class citizens on campus. There has been a huge spike in
opposition and attempted blocking of our events since Trump was elected president."
25
Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America, an antiabortion organization
that has groups on high school and college campuses in all 50 states, echoed that idea. "Since the
3
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term_.2357d6bcfd75
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
election of President Trump, it's gotten more dangerous on campus," she said. “Those who
advocate for legal abortion feel their backs are against the wall. It's more tense."
26 She said students have told her about other students and professors obstructing their
efforts to share their antiabortion views erasing sidewalk chalk messages, for example,
throwing blankets over information tables and pulling crosses out of the ground. “They have had
to fight for their First Amendment rights," Hawkins said. “This is an exciting day for us."
27 Trump strongly defended free speech on campus two years ago after police at the
University of California at Berkeley canceled a talk by the far-right provocateur Milo
Yiannopoulos amid intense protests by masked activists, who set fires and threw stones. Trump
tweeted the next morning, “If U.C. Berkeley does not allow free speech and practices violence
on innocent people with a different point of view — NO FEDERAL FUNDS?"
28 Many higher-education leaders say freedom of speech is central to their academic
mission.
)
29 “College and university campuses are leading the way for our society in supporting free
speech," Julie Wollman, president of Widener University in Pennsylvania, said in a statement.
"On most campuses that work happens daily and naturally, without fanfare, because our
overarching and common mission in American higher education is to broadly educate and
prepare students for active participation as engaged citizens in our democracy."
30 The tensions that make headlines reflect the commitment to honor and encourage free
speech, Wollman said.
4
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term.2357d6bcfd75
8
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
The president declared it the first in a number of steps the administration would take to
defend students' rights. Universities have tried to restrict free thought and impose conformity, he
said.
9
“All of that changes right now," he said. “We're dealing with billions and billions and
billions of dollars."
10
Universities that want taxpayer dollars should promote free speech, not silence it, he said.
11
Trump's announcement earlier this month that he would make federal funding for
universities contingent on assurances of free speech elicited cheers and applause at the
Conservative Political Action Conference meeting. But it also prompted questions, including
who would define and judge free speech and what type of federal funding could be withheld —
research dollars, student aid or both.
12 Those following the issue said they were relieved the order does not designate or create
an agency to police speech on campus, while acknowledging that the order's full effect could not
be known until it was implemented.
13 “To the extent that the executive order asks colleges to do what they are either legally
required to do — follow the First Amendment on public campuses, or follow their own promises
on private campuses — we think that should be uncontroversial," said Robert Shibley, executive
director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which advocates for freedom of
F.I.RE
speech on campus.
14 “It will come down to how each agency decides to implement it, what the steps are they
take to do that," Shibley said.
15 His organization and others, he said, will watch to see whether those agencies use clearly
established First Amendment principles upheld by law or instead rely on their own
interpretations.
16 Suzanne Nossel, the chief executive officer of PEN America, a human rights organization
that advocates for free expression, said the political context of the order was disturbing.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education 2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect=on&utm term.2357d6bcfd75
2
ESLINTG 100
Summarize this article for Essay #3
Read the full text of the executive order here:
EXECUTIVE ORDER
IMPROVING FREE INQUIRY, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY AT
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States
of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section 1. Purpose. The purpose of this order is to enhance the quality of postsecondary
education by making it more affordable, more transparent, and more accountable. Institutions of
higher education (institutions) should be accountable both for student outcomes and for student
life on campus.
In particular, my Administration seeks to promote free and open debate on college and university
campuses. Free inquiry is an essential feature of our Nation's democracy, and it promotes
learning, scientific discovery, and economic prosperity. We must encourage institutions to
appropriately account for this bedrock principle in their administration of student life and to
avoid creating environments that stifle competing perspectives, thereby potentially impeding
beneficial research and undermining learning.
The financial burden of higher education on students and their families is also a national problem
that needs immediate attention. Over the past 30 years, college tuition and fees have grown at
more than twice the rate of the Consumer Price Index. Rising student loan debt, coupled with
low repayment rates, threatens the financial health of both individuals and families as well as of
Federal student loan programs. In addition, too many programs of study fail to prepare students
for success in today's job market.
The Federal Government can take meaningful steps to address these problems. Selecting an
institution and course of study are important decisions for prospective students and significantly
affect long-term earnings. Institutions should be transparent about the average earnings and loan
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2019/03/21/trump-expected-sign-executive-order-free
speech/?noredirect on&utm_term.2357d6bcfd75
5
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